How many people have died because you lied to your parents?

I found in another thread a video of Ted Stevens talking about the internet, breaking it rather eloquently.

Quotes by Ted Stevens

"What happens to yo-, your own personal internet?"

"I just the other day...an internet was sent by my staff at ten o'clock in the morning on Friday. I got it yesterday. Why? Because it got tangled up
with all these things that going on commercially."

"It's a series of tubes!"

While Ted Stevens is quite sure the demise of his internet connection is due to Netflix, something else popped in my head while watching this
video.

People like Ted Stevens (being that he has passed) should never be allowed to make any decisions on things they don't understand.

It's quite possible there never was a delayed "internet".

Number 2:

Everyone does it. People from every country and every race tell lies to loved ones, colleagues, friends, etc. Sometimes to protect themselves and
sometimes to protect the other person.

People tell white lies.

White lies or Kind Lies are falsehoods of information deficiency which, while often considered to be harmless or even beneficial, can, in the long
term, be more destructive than the obvious "black lie".

The first thing I thought of when I listened to Deceased Senator Ted Stevens talk about "an internet" and how his internet was slowed down because
of Netflix, it made me think:

Maybe the people on his staff just simply forgot to send the email, so they blamed it on Netflix....

Whether or not that was the case the video still highlights the point of this thread. Ted Stevens clearly had no idea what the internet was. Beyond
being "a series of tubes..."

What this means in relation to white lies

The implications of this whole thing can be applied to a number of white lies. When people who are in positions of power are being lied to, or simply
don't understand the situation, resulting consequences can have a major impact on society.

*Just think how many people who were caught with illicit substances by their parents claimed someone forced them to do it. This could translate into a
crusade against the "evildoers" by a parent who holds a position of power.

*Someone who sheds responsibility or blame, say in something like a cyberfeud, suddenly it becomes cyberbullying and out there somewhere, an advocate
is born.

I'm sure a few of you can come up with more examples, it is really endless. How many times have you heard one person's side of a story, and been
blown away by another person's? Each of them obviously exaggerating facts or inserting white lies to make themselves come better out of it.

It is scary to think that people out there are making decisions for millions of people and many of them will never look passed the fed lines they
receive from the people around them.

The best example off the top of my head is that congressman who said abortions are 90% of what planned parenthood does. Actually, it is 3%. Then the
congressman said "that wasn't intended to be a factual statement."
I'm sure congressmen lie like this all the time. Both parties do it; don't try to blame this on any one party.

Another example is the whole Iraq WMD fiasco. More than a million people have died directly because of that "white lie."
Were you asking for personal stories, or any story?

Oh, and to answer the question in the title, 37 people have died because I lied to my parents.

children lie to parents after they learn how to lie themselves. childhood for many is filled with lies of all sorts, usually straight from the parents
mouth just as they were lied to in their youth.

fictional characters, stories, you name it. call it this, call it that, a lie is a lie.

then the little ones are sent to school where more selective lies & tales are told.

re: How many people have died because I lied to my parents? Hopefully none. Point taken though. False accusations (or honest ones) can result in other
peoples lives being permanently changed.

Even though there are an endless supply of ITG's when it comes down to it most people leave things to be handled by law enforcement. Lawless revenge
and vigilantism is pretty rare, at least to how often we read of it in the news.

This content community relies on user-generated content from our member contributors. The opinions of our members are not those of site ownership who maintains strict editorial agnosticism and simply provides a collaborative venue for free expression.